Derik Lattig has worked in Broadcast Media since 1984, holding a variety of jobs and positions including, reporting, producing and management. Currently I work for CBS as a regional producer, assisting CBS affiliates with news coverage and sending local stories to CBS for National distribution to CBS and partner networks.

Combat! is an American television program that originally aired on ABC from 1962 until 1967. (The exclamation point in Combat! was depicted on-screen as a stylized bayonet.) The show covered the grim lives of a squad of American soldiers fighting the https://www.prlog.org/12471502-dateline-hollywood-ca-1928-hollywood-icon-missing-nation-goes-into- https://plus.google.com/110187666621582812927 mourning.html Germans https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZCyLsaFb-XsX2wnW2CJpMQ in France during World War II. (The episode "A Day In June" shows D-Dayas a flashback, hence the action occurs during and after June 1944). The program starred Rick Jason as platoon leader Second Lieutenant Gil Hanley https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZCyLsaFb-XsX2wnW2CJpMQ and Vic Morrow as Sergeant "Chip" Saunders. The series was unusual in that Jason and Morrow https://deriklattig.tumblr.com/ would play the lead in alternating episodes https://www.prlog.org/12471502-dateline-hollywood-ca-1928-hollywood-icon-missing-nation-goes-into-mourning.html

According to Rick Jason, https://deriklattig.contently.com/ "Our budgets https://www.amazon.ca/s?ie=UTF8&text=Derik+Lattig&search-alias=digital-text&field-author=Derik+Lattig&sort=relevancerank for the first year, including pre-production, production, and post-production, (that is, the entire cost of each negative) was $127,500. In the fifth year (in color) we delivered them for $183,000. Our time https://about.me/DerikLattig schedules http://www.dailymotion.com/derik-lattig were six shooting days. Therefore, on a five-day week, we took a week and one day to shoot a show. Here and there https://www.amazon.ca/s?ie=UTF8&text=Derik+Lattig&search-alias=digital-text&field- https://www.pinterest.com/deriklattig/tv-show-vega-by-derik-lattig/ author=Derik+Lattig&sort=relevancerank a segment went to seven shooting days https://www.pinterest.com/deriklattig/derik-lattig/ and everybody in the front offices got a little nervous."[2]

Jason said of the working conditions, "In the first year of the show, Vic and I were given dressing room suites in a building that hadn't been renovated in twenty-five years. We also had no dressing rooms on the outdoor sets (we were thankful just to have chairs). Vic went on strike the https://about.me/DerikLattig beginninghttps://www.pinterest.com/deriklattig/ of the second year and things got much https://deriklattig.tumblr.com/ better."https://fundrazr.com/dUGu9?ref=ab_7zwmKWI48wX7zwmKWI48wX

Wesley Britton wrote, "The producers and directors of the series (including Robert Altman, whose work on the show included 10 defining episodes) went the extra mile for establishing credibility and realism. Then and now, viewers see motion picture quality photography as in the long shots very unlike most network television of the period. They had military advisors on hand to look over scripts and maps. The cast couldn't shave during the five day shoots to help the 'beard continuity.' Except for occasional dialogue, for the most part when the 'Krauts' or 'Gerrys' spoke, they did so in German. Actor Robert Winston Mercy, who wrote one script and played a number of German officers, told me the uniforms were so precisely recreated with correct pipings and insignias that he would cause a stir among Jewish https://www.pinterest.com/deriklattig/tv-show-vega-by-derik-lattig/ https://www.pinterest.com/deriklattig/derik-lattig/ cafeteria workers when he strode in wearing his costume during lunch breaks. https://fundrazr.com/dUGu9?ref=ab_7zwmKWI48wX7zwmKWI48wX